Over the years I’ve been using smartphones, there’s been one feature I’ve enthusiastically adopted: the smartphone as a camera. I used to carry a small pocket point-and-shoot with me everywhere I went. Now I don’t, I just have a phone.
For a long time now, that’s been a Windows Phone. I’ve gone from Windows Phone 7 to 8 to 8.1, and finally to Windows 10 Mobile. But now I’m using something different and have been carrying a couple of Android devices: a Samsung Note 5 and Huawei P9. Both are excellent camera phones, with good quality sensors and well-designed lenses. The P9 goes a step further, with a dual-camera designed in conjunction with Leica, giving it a range of features that I’d previously only found on high-end Nokia Lumia.
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Modern Android cameras have a lot of built-in features. The Note 5 gives you panoramas, focus controls, slow and fast motion video, and even a basic VR capture mode where you can walk around an object and capture a 3D image that can be controlled by tilting your device. Similarly, the P9 has tools for delivering HDR images, night and time-lapse photography, special light painting modes, and even direct access to the device’s monochrome camera. Both also offer plenty of in-camera editing options, including a set of tools for quickly adding color splash effects on the P9 or tuning colors and exposure on the Note 5.
The combination of features on both devices makes them credible pocket cameras, capable of taking good, clear pictures and applying appropriate processing effects when necessary. I’ve quickly grown fond of the P9’s monochrome photography tools, and its color effects are ideal companions to Instagram’s library of filters.
I’ve also been able to find Android versions of some of my key photography apps from Windows Phone. Perhaps the most important of them is Microsoft’s Office Lens, which lets me quickly take pictures of slides and whiteboards and drop them into a OneNote notebook ready for annotation as part of my personal, searchable archive of meetings and conference sessions going back more than a decade.
Finding those apps was the hardest part of my migration to a new platform, as perhaps the biggest problem facing anyone wanting to go beyond the built-in apps on their device is the size of the Google Play Store. It’s easy to find big-name apps like Photoshop and Snapseed, but there’s a long tail of applications that’s hard to explore. If you want a special effects app, for example, to add color pop effects to an image, you’ll suddenly find yourself presented with a long list of apps with ratings that are all very similar.
Drilling into the app list lets you see reviews, but most of the time, they’re not particularly informative. That’s a problem in most app stores, but coming to Android from Windows Phone is particularly obvious — the sheer size of Google Play is a significant problem. Then, there’s the perennial issue of identifying real users’ real reviews and trying to determine how their taste aligns with yours.